Thick and Soft Chocolate Peanut Butter Cookies

But these aren’t just any peanut butter cookies. There’s: No butter, No white sugar, and No flour used.

The cookies are brownie-like in thickness and density, super fudgy, and not at all cakey. They’re slightly chewy around the edges with soft, tender, rich interiors that I just want to sink my teeth into. And the crackled edges are prime for picking off.

I was trying to decide whether they’re more chocolate-peanut butter cookies or peanut butter-chocolate cookies, and in the end chocolate-peanut butter wins. The chocolate intensity is bold and unadulterated, but the peanut butter is definitely present. Because there’s no butter or flour used, the peanut butter shines and gives the chocolate a run for its money. When I was making the dough and before I even turned on the oven, my husband shouted out, It smells like peanut butter in here! There’s enough peanut butter in the dough to send the sweet fumes wafting through the house.

The recipe makes a baker’s dozen, 13 cookies, perfect for times you have a chocolate and peanut butter craving, but don’t need too many cookies lingering around the house.

Make them by combining peanut butter, brown sugar, one egg, one tablespoon of vanilla, and mix until well-combined, about 5 minutes. The brown sugar is gritty and granular for the first few minutes of beating, so make sure to cream the ingredients until the sugar has smoothed out, stopping to scrape down the sides of the bowl as necessary. There’s very little harm in over-mixing here and even with a powerful mixer, it takes time for the ingredients to come together smoothly.

I used light brown sugar but they’d be scrumptious with dark brown sugar. I like using Peter Pan Honey Roasted Peanut Butter for these cookies, but regular Jif or Skippy is fine. Don’t use natural or Homemade Peanut Butter. As lovely as they are for eating with a spoon or spreading on toast, they lack the structure that storebought peanut butter has and I don’t recommend them for baking. Good old-fashioned Jif, Skippy, or Peter Pan are my recommendations.

Chocolate peanut butter like Dark Chocolate Dreams (code AVE630 will save you $10 on your first order) could be used, but because not everyone has access to it, and I kept things more universal with old-school peanut butter. Creamy peanut butter is the only way for me, but if you like little marbles in your cookies, go with crunchy.

Add the baking soda, cocoa powder, and mix to incorporate them. I use Trader Joe’s unsweetened natural cocoa but a Dutch-process cocoa or Hershey’s Special Dark would be nice. I have the hardest time finding it, but if you use it or a similar very dark cocoa, you may want to use slightly less than the half-cup indicated so the cookies don’t turn bitter. For cookies, I don’t bother sifting cocoa powder, but sift if you wish.

The dough should come together into a big mass. If there are crumbly pieces, that’s fine as long as when you go to press them into the rest of the larger mass, they stick together. If for some reason your dough is too dry, sandy, and not combining, add a little more peanut butter, one tablespoon at a time, blending to incorporate. I’ve found with this dough that even one tablespoon can make the difference. Because climates and brands of peanut butter and cocoa vary, it’s possible you may need to add a touch more peanut butter.

With a medium cookie scoop, form two-inch diameter mounds. My scooped mounds weighed 1.80 ounces each and the recipe makes just 13 cookies. If you don’t have a scoop, roll them into balls. Make a criss-cross pattern on top of the mounds with a fork. This not only gives them that old-fashioned, classic peanut butter cookie look, but it serves to flatten them just enough so when baking they don’t stay too domed. With properly chilled dough, they don’t spread or flatten much, so smooshing them just a touch is recommend, but not too much or you won’t wind up with thick-as-brownies cookies

Place the dough mounds on a large plate, cover with plasticwrap, and refrigerate for at least two hours, or up to five days, before baking. If you don’t chill the dough and bake with warm, limp dough, your chances for thick, puffy, fat cookies go out the window.

Bake at 350F oven for 8 to 10 minutes, but I really recommend the lower end of the range. The cookies in the photos were baked for eight minutes, with the trays rotated once at the four-minute mark. It’s hard to really determine if the cookies are done then because the dough is dark and they’ll look underdone at eight minutes, but firm up as they cool.

Cocoa powder has a way of inherently drying things out and not over-baking is key to having them set up soft and chewy, and stay moist and fresh as the days pass. If you prefer slightly more well-done cookies, go for nine minutes, maybe ten, but don’t bake them longer than 10 minutes or they’ll set up too firm and crunchy and turn dry and crumbly.

They’re thick, dense, moist, and soft in the middle. I love the fork impressions on the surface and how the edges became crackled. Picking off crackled cookie edges is the cookie equivalent to picking off muffin tops, both of which I’m very good at. I relish breaking them apart at the splits and seams. Big morsels of fudgy cookie just chunk right off and easily find their way into my mouth.

They have a bit of fine-grain grittiness, a result of the cocoa powder and peanut butter combining. It gives the cookies an old-fashioned and distinctly homemade taste like something from an old-fashioned diner where a little old lady is still making the desserts from scratch. The exclusive use of brown sugar serves to keep them softer and moister than using granulated and they keep well for up to a week.

There’s no flour to cloud the chocolate flavor, which packs a punch. The cookies aren’t too sweet and are more adult-themed than your typical peanut butter-based cookie. Although my six year old never says no to chocolate, they go just as well with a few shots of espresso as they would with a glass of milk. The honey roasted peanut butter makes for a slightly sweeter cookie than using plain peanut butter, but either way keeping butter out of the recipe allows the boldness and purity of chocolate and peanut butter to shine through.

National Peanut Butter Lover’s Day is a nostalgic holiday for me. Ironically, this week last year I had just inked my contract to write my cookbook, Peanut Butter Comfort. I almost shared the news for the holiday, but decided to wait. For another 51 weeks. Until I just announced it last week, My Cookbook: Peanut Butter Comfort. And then for National Peanut Day in September, I almost announced the book again, but instead I simply shared 35 National Peanut Day Recipes.

But now, a peanut butter holiday to be celebrated with a peanut butter cookbook under my belt, and with chocolate and peanut butter in full force.

Chocolate and peanut butter is probably the best flavor pairing on earth. Sure, twist my arm.

Thick and Soft Chocolate Peanut Butter Cookies (gluten-free)

Yield:about 13 medium-sized cookies

Total Time:20 minutes

Prep Time:12 minutes

Cook Time:8 minutes

There’s NO Flour, NO Butter, and NO White sugar used! The flavor is intensely chocolaty, balanced by the sweet and creamy peanut butter. The cookies are brownie-like in density and thickness. They’re soft, chewy, and moist. They’re more rich and bold than they are overly sweet. For those who love pairing chocolate and peanut butter, these cookies are for you. It’s a small-batch recipe, and makes just a baker’s dozen, perfect for quick cravings when you don’t need a huge batch of cookies.

Directions:

To the mixing bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, combine peanut butter, brown sugar, egg, vanilla, and beat on medium-high speed until well-combined and the sugar is fully incorporated and is mixture is no longer gritty or granular, about 5 minutes. Stop to scrape down the bowl as necessary. Note regarding peanut butter – although natural peanut butter or homemade peanut butter may work, I recommend using storebought peanut butter like Jif, Skippy, Peter Pan or similar so that cookies bake up thicker and spread less. Using natural or homemade peanut butter tends to result in thinner, flatter cookies, that are prone to spreading.

Add the cocoa powder (I don’t bother to sift), baking soda, and beat to incorporate, 1 to 2 minutes. Dough may be a bit crumbly in pieces, but pieces should all stick together forming a large mound when pinched, squeezed, and pushed together. If your dough seems dry, adding 1 to 2 additional tablespoons of peanut butter will help it combine.

Using a 2-inch medium cookie scoop (about 2 heaping tablespoons of dough or 1.80 ounces by weight), form dough mounds or roll dough into balls. Recipe makes 13 cookies; dividing dough into 13 equal portions is another way to do this.

Place dough on a large plate and flatten each mound with a fork, making a criss-cross pattern on top. Slightly flattening the mounds before baking ensures they don’t stay too domed and puffed while baking because this dough, when properly chilled, doesn’t spread much; just don’t over-flatten. Cover plate with plastic wrap and refrigerate for at least 2 hours, or up to 5 days, before baking. Do not bake with warm dough.

Preheat oven to 350F, line 2 baking sheets with Silpat Non-Stick Baking Mats, parchment, or spray with cooking spray; set aside. Space dough 2 inches apart (8 to 10 per tray) and bake for 8 to 10 minutes, until edges are set and tops are barely set, even if slightly underbaked in the center. It’s tricky to discern if they’re done or not because they’re so dark, but watch them very closely after 7 minutes. I recommend the lower end of the baking range. Cookies firm up as they cool, and baking too long will result in cookies that set up too crisp and hard (The cookies shown in the photos were baked for 8 minutes, with trays rotated at the 4-minute mark, and have chewy edges with pillowy, soft centers).

Allow cookies to cool on the baking sheet for 5 to 10 minutes before removing and transferring to a rack to finish cooling. Store cookies in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 1 week, or in the freezer for up to 3 months. Alternatively, unbaked cookie dough can be stored in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 5 days, so consider baking only as many cookies as desired and save the remaining dough to be baked in the future when desired.

Recipe from Averie Cooks. All images and content are copyright protected. Please do not use my images without prior permission. If you want to republish this recipe, please re-write the recipe in your own words, or simply link back to this post for the recipe. Thank you.

Mounds Bar Chocolate Coconut Cake Mix Cookies – Chocolate and coconut is a winning combination and I baked both chocolate chips and Mounds Bar candy bars into these easy, goofproof chocolate cake mix cookies that turn out soft and moist every time

242 comments on “Thick and Soft Chocolate Peanut Butter Cookies”

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Hello! I was so hopeful with this recipe, but the results were not thick and soft at all. I don’t know where I went wrong as I followed the recipe exactly, and the cookies have the consistency of crushed sandpaper. :( this makes me super sad but I’m going to try again another time this week.

This dough is on the more crumbly side and if you overbake these at ALL, they do get pretty crumbly, which is what I guess happened to you.

If you want a really fudgy, chocolaty cookie, try these! I just posted them! https://www.averiecooks.com/2015/11/hot-chocolate-cookies.html And then look under the ‘Related Recipes’ because there are links to tons of other great dark chocolate cookies. Try the Quadruple Fudgy Cookies, too, would be another top recommendation!

I just made these and they’re wonderful! I know you said not to use the natural peanut butter (and I understand why, due to the differing consistencies) but it was all we had on hand so I tried it. I actually just made half of the recipe because I wasn’t sure how the cookies would turn out with all the changes I made. In addition to the peanut butter, I used coconut palm sugar instead of the brown sugar, and a flax egg instead of a real one. Also I mixed it by hand because we don’t have a stand mixer. Let the flattened balls of dough chill overnight and baked them up this morning, and even with all my changes, the cookies are still awesome and just the texture you described! We don’t often have goodies in our house, so my two young boys were super excited to get a cookie . . . the five year old is trying to savor his as long as possible, and the two year old gobbled his up immediately and then cried because it was gone. Thanks for the good recipe!

I followed the directions exactly and got amazingly decadent fudgy cookies. Heart eyes all around! The texture and sweetness was perfect. For some reason, my cookies spread and were thinner than the ones pictured. (I promise I chilled the dough!) I was perfectly fine with it though since they still came out chewy. I mean who doesn’t want a bigger cookie? Though, the top came out cracked and didn’t keep the fork indentions. I used crunchy peanut butter and had bits of peanuts throughout for texture. I love the simple ingredients. Ready to make these again!

I made these but doubled the recipe and pressed them into a small sheet pan to make cookie bars. Worked great. Didn’t chill the dough or anything. (I was in a hurry) I baked them about 15 minutes but my oven is usually slow.

So I have followed you for awhile because you have one of the best sites out there, and in spite of the mixed review I thought that I would try these. They taste and looked great, but as others had said, they couldn’t even be picked up. I usually use less sugar in my baking and I had to add more to these.

After eating a few with a spoon, I finally pressed them into a pie crust while cooling down. The pie crust looks pretty good. :) Maybe you have some ideas for filling because obviously I can’t go too sweet. I bake a lot of cookies and I am not afraid to experiment but these missed the mark for me, unfortunately.

Thx for such a quick response, Averie. I think because this is so rich and decadent I might have to go with a banana cream/coconut. I could post it with a photo if you like? It’s a very unique crust now, I will say that as I can’t really find anything like it online.

Maybe if I would have let them sit longer they might have been okay, but mine did not look as thick as yours.

By the way, I would love to hear more about your running and fitness regime. Now I see how you are able to make such decadent dishes. Next time I will try something else.

This cookie recipe was amazing! I swapped some of the cocoa powder with some plant based protein powder, less sugar but it really turned out with perfect texture, taste and consistency and this is from someone who isn’t a big fan of peanut butter, absolutely loved it. 5 stars

I have made these cookies a couple of times now and LOVE them. I did add chocolate chips for a little more chocolately goodness. I am not gluten sensitive but have friends that are and I’ve shared this recipe with them.

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